Victorian Working Women

Paperback, 168 pages

Published Nov. 20, 1979 by Moyer Bell Ltd ,U.S..

ISBN:
978-0-86092-033-5
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3 stars (1 review)

3 editions

Portraits from an oft-ignored world

3 stars

Although the popular image of the Victorian woman, both now and during the era, is that she took care of the home, this was only true for "respectable" households, that is, those of the middle and upper classes. Among the lower classes, many women worked.

"Victorian Working Women" discusses such women, as well as their often-unknowing influence on the broader women's right movement. Maids, street-sellers, mine workers, fishers, gymnasts, and other women workers are featured and pictured here. The book draws primarily from Arthur Munby's diaries and photo collection, supplemented by other sources, though it still clearly reflects Munby's biases and limitations in its coverage, for example, sex workers and rural workers barely feature. Still, it is a valuable collection of images and descriptions of groups of women that other works seldom bother with, showing the way they dressed both at work and at rest, the way they spoke, and …